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Greg Prince and Jason Fry
Faith and Fear in Flushing made its debut on Feb. 16, 2005, the brainchild of two longtime friends and lifelong Met fans.

Greg Prince discovered the Mets when he was 6, during the magical summer of 1969. He is a Long Island-based writer, editor and communications consultant. Contact him here.

Jason Fry is a Brooklyn writer whose first memories include his mom leaping up and down cheering for Rusty Staub. Check out his other writing here.

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Menschiness Didn’t Save Mendy

By the general acclaim of those who interacted with him on a regular basis, Carlos Mendoza was a mensch. It didn’t matter. Consensus rarely pinned on him the bulk of the Mets’ on-field woes that stretched back more than 365 days in the course of the year-plus his ballclub circled the drain. It didn’t matter. Managers are said not to matter as they did in the era when they cut larger-than-life figures and were perceived as their organizations’ primary strategists, tacticians, and maybe molders of men. That didn’t matter, either. Following one last languid loss to fall amid a blizzard of life-lacking Ls, Mendy the Mensch is no longer the manager of the Mets.

I feel bad for the human being who wore the uniform. I’m hopeful the implied shakeup his dismissal represents will impact for the better the team he leaves behind. I have no idea if his interim successor, 2009 cameoist Andy Green — 871st Met overall and 139th Met third baseman ever, for those of me keeping score — will make any difference over the impending half-season. If managers don’t matter, not even the ones considered splendid individuals skilled in the execution of baseball administration at the level that bridges the clubhouse and the front office, then what is there to expect from Andy Green taking over a 34-47 lost cause? What was there to expect from Carlos Mendoza after the Mets’ cause started getting lost not quite midway through the season before the current one?

Page 9 of the 2026 yearbook. Gonna need to print a revised edition.

As we’ve found ourselves saying more than a few times upon the departures of those connected with our most recent magical spurt, we will always have 2024 to think of Mendoza at his finest. Surely he was a difference-making manager when those Mets rose from nearly dead and soared close to a World Series. As the champagne flowed in Atlanta, in Milwaukee, and at Citi Field after the vanquishing of Philadelphia, only the most hard-bitten cranks would have grumbled we’d gotten where we’d gotten in spite of Mendy or irrespective of Mendy. When your team wins, your manager is exactly what your team had to have.

When Mendoza wasn’t being that, he came off as a good guy overseeing a bad team, giving inadequate answers when asked to explain subpar play, probably because it’s hard to articulate impactfully over the sound of a swirling drain. He wasn’t the one committing the costliest errors, making the rally-killing outs, or giving up the backbreaking hits. Nor was he the one acquiring the players whose collective shortcomings consigned more than a year’s worth of Met box scores to the Horror section of Baseball-Reference. Mendy was stuck in the middle with us, not happy with what he was watching, though he put on a more stoic face than we ever could regarding the unrelenting stream of contemporary Met miseries.

He was the manager. It turned out to really not matter.

8 comments to Menschiness Didn’t Save Mendy

  • Seth

    Carlos Menschdoza? Good one. I hear Andy “Green” (appropriate last name) doesn’t have much managerial experience. You’re right — it doesn’t matter.

  • Harvey

    Green managed the Padres to 4 losing seasons. Over 640 games, he had a .428 winning percentage. Don’t expect much better here,

  • Cobra Joe

    I think that Mets fan of a “certain age” will recall that the Mets swept the Chicago Cubs in a five-game series in Wrigley Field in 1970, if I remember the year correctly.

    Well, here we are, 56 years later and the Cubs have just swept the Mets at Citi Field in a four-game series, costing Mets manager Carlos Mendoza his job.

    I think that Carlos Mendoza is a very decent man, much like former Mets managers Jerry Manuel and “Affable” Art Howe.

    In addition to watching the young guys like Benge, Ewing and McLean continue to play on the major league level for the remainder of this season, we’ll also all be waiting to see what other personnel moves Mets POBO David Stearns makes to improve this extremely disappointing team.

    Yes, men like Johnny Murphy, Bob Scheffing, Joe McDonald, Frank Cashen, Joe McIlvaine, Al Harazin, Steve Phillips, Omar Minaya, Sandy Alderson and Brody Van Wagenen, we’ve seen them all come and go over the past half century.

    Let’s hope that 2027 is a much better year for our New York Mets than 2026 has been.

  • Ben Z

    I learned from Wikipedia that Andy Green’s 1-for-4 appearance with the Mets in ’09 “pushed his lifetime Major League batting average above the Mendoza Line.” And here he goes, traversing another kind of Mendoza line.

  • Dak442

    Mendoza can take a seat next to Willie Randolph on the Solid Baseball Men and Really Good Guys Who Had Initial Success And Then The Team Pooped The Bed On Them bench

    Rooting for this team has once again become a chore. I’m no front runner – losing doesn’t scare me off. But boring, uninspired play and a lackluster, generic roster sure does.

    Trade or dump most of the roster and start over with Lindor, Soto, Alvy, Benge and some of the young pitchers. Hope I’m around long enough to see it come to fruition.

    Oh well, 86 was fun.

  • Left Coast Jerry

    The next 10 games are against the Phillies, Blue Jays, and Braves. I’d be very surprised if Andy Green does any better than 3-7.

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